Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7243654 | Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization | 2013 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
While standard theory assumes rational, optimizing agents under full information, the latter is rarely found in reality. Information has to be acquired and processed-both involving costs. In rational-inattentiveness models agents update their information set only when the benefit outweighs the information cost. We test the rational-inattentiveness model in a controlled laboratory environment. Our design is a forecasting task with costly information and a clear cost-benefit structure. While we find numerous deviations from the model predictions on the individual level, the aggregate results are consistent with rational-inattentiveness and sticky information models rejecting simpler behavioral heuristics.
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Authors
Henry Goecke, Wolfgang J. Luhan, Michael W.M. Roos,